Description
‘The Fall of Darkness’ clamours for revolution, as the efficacious means of cleansing many African states whose leaders tend toward jungle rules, emanating from their disrespect for the rule of law, which makes living in such places seem like living in the jungle. While leaders in other democracies strive for what to do for their countries these ones, as political vampires, are out to suck their own countries dry, and plunging them into poverty of money, mores and morals.
The novel predicts a silver-lining similar to that experience in Matorka: the leaders who were afraid of revolution did not know when they started the revolution themselves, in such a way that it soared and raged, and at the end all messengers of darkness in Matorka stood on a dangerous precipice of extinction.
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